| fct_reorder | R Documentation | 
fct_reorder() is useful for 1d displays where the factor is mapped to
position; fct_reorder2() for 2d displays where the factor is mapped to
a non-position aesthetic. last2() and first2() are helpers for fct_reorder2();
last2() finds the last value of y when sorted by x; first2() finds the first value.
fct_reorder( .f, .x, .fun = median, ..., .na_rm = NULL, .default = Inf, .desc = FALSE ) fct_reorder2( .f, .x, .y, .fun = last2, ..., .na_rm = NULL, .default = -Inf, .desc = TRUE ) last2(.x, .y) first2(.x, .y)
| .f | A factor (or character vector). | 
| .x, .y | The levels of  | 
| .fun | n summary function. It should take one vector for
 | 
| ... | Other arguments passed on to  | 
| .na_rm | Should  | 
| .default | What default value should we use for  | 
| .desc | Order in descending order? Note the default is different
between  | 
# fct_reorder() ------------------------------------------------------------- # Useful when a categorical variable is mapped to position boxplot(Sepal.Width ~ Species, data = iris) boxplot(Sepal.Width ~ fct_reorder(Species, Sepal.Width), data = iris) # or with library(ggplot2) ggplot(iris, aes(fct_reorder(Species, Sepal.Width), Sepal.Width)) + geom_boxplot() # fct_reorder2() ------------------------------------------------------------- # Useful when a categorical variable is mapped to color, size, shape etc chks <- subset(ChickWeight, as.integer(Chick) < 10) chks <- transform(chks, Chick = fct_shuffle(Chick)) # Without reordering it's hard to match line to legend ggplot(chks, aes(Time, weight, colour = Chick)) + geom_point() + geom_line() # With reordering it's much easier ggplot(chks, aes(Time, weight, colour = fct_reorder2(Chick, Time, weight))) + geom_point() + geom_line() + labs(colour = "Chick")
Add the following code to your website.
For more information on customizing the embed code, read Embedding Snippets.